Starting from Scratch

According to Microsoft, the development team started from scratch with the new apps, in an effort to create products that are native to the iPad but also look and feel like the very familiar Office application environment we all know and love.

I must confess that having played around with the apps on my iPad, the experience is good, very good in fact and can imagine many other business users are going to feel the same way. Particularly interesting (and this has been an issue with the Apple iWork/Pages/Numbers/Keynote suite), is that documents seem to appear consistently across my iPad and my desktop PC - a real necessity if you want to be truly productive on the move, and confident your work will be available when you arrive back at your desk.

Before I get too excited, there are a few key caveats to mention:

You’ll Need an Office 365 Subscription

Although you can download a free version of the apps to try, you do need an Office 365 subscription in order to edit and create new documents - not a huge surprise given Microsoft’s direction of travel. Happily the apps can be installed on up to 5 tablets with a standard subscription - a boon for the small business along with all the other benefits a subscription to the service brings.

There is also a personal subscription available at a very reasonable $7 per month. Naturally there are restrictions - the licence only covers one PC and one tablet, and you only have access to 20GB of storage.

No Printing Quite Yet

There is no printing functionality available within the applications, an omission that took me by surprise but is apparently in the works for a future release. To be honest I am printing less and less these days, and if I can do so from my desktop PC, which happens to be in the same office as my printer, I’m happy.

No Custom Macros in Excel for iPad

Custom macros simply won’t run on Excel for iPad, so if you depend on them for your work, the product won’t be suitable - back to the desktop.

And Finally…

Whilst it’s very interesting to see these apps released, having just recently purchased a Surface Pro 2, I’m not going to be switching to iOS for my mobile work any time soon, but if you've been holding off on an iPad until Office comes along, now might just be the time to take the plunge! If you're sitting on the fence, or need some advice, please give Philip or myself a call and we’ll be delighted to help.

In February 2013, a free-to-use email management application called Mailbox shot up Apple's iOS App Store's ranks - becoming the store's second most downloaded app on the day of its release. Barely a month later, cloud-based file hosting giant, Dropbox acquired the app for $100 million - in a move which is still sending ripples across the cloud storage landscape.

We are all more than aware of the Government’s drive for more efficient public spending and one particularly interesting area from our standpoint is the recent announcement that Vodafone has launched a new ‘Flexible Computing for Government’ which relies heavily on - you guessed it - the Cloud. As we are huge fans of the Cloud here at Shackleton, the news piqued our interest.